Hilo tribune. (Hilo, Hawaii) 1895-1917, October 24, 1902, Image 7

Image and text provided by University of Hawaii at Manoa; Honolulu, HI

1 - "!A Wiin.1,1 ju .''qwflffKnmMkJ i eat59tlli'l ''MlH r fe 1tm i i rr m i ii wp m ittwp 1t; .1 -''piiV-.- ("5XSls-iVV' .Mm'- 1(r 1Golds of ten'hang on.You try this thing andthat thing,. ovory kindof homo remedy andcheap cough mixtures,and yet your cold continues to hang on.You must not deallightly with theso oldcolds. You must gotrid of them just assoon as possible Youmust tako somothlng tobreak their hold.Ayer'sCherry Pectoralsoothes lrrltablo throats, heals Inflamedbronchial tubes, ntul quiets congestionin tho lungs. This is why it so quicklycontrols thoso old coughs and prevents pnoumonla nnd consumption."I was troubled with a very hardcough 'which I could not got rid of.WhonlToad of Aycr's Chorry PectoralI sent 'to Johannesburg and procureda bottlo. It completely -cured mo, and Iliavo many comrades horo who havo hadliard coughs cured in tho samo way, "-IVa, Sessions, Company C, Second RoyalUcrks.Keg,, Net's 8prult,TransTaAl,S. Africa.Thcro aro many substitutes and imitations, nowaro of them! Bo suroyou got Ayer's Chorry PoctoTal.Two sizes. Largo and small bottles.Frtpirea ij Dr. J. C. Aytt & Co., Lowell, Mm., U.S.A.For Sale by HILO DRUG COMPANY.Union Barber Shop.GARCIA & CANARIO, Props.We Shacc, Cui Rair and Shampooat Cci-Cioc Rates.We also take particular pains with Children's Ilaircutting.Union Buhdinc,Waianuenue St.Hilo Barber ShopCARVALHO BROS.,Proprietors.The Old Reliable Stand isstill doingUP-TO-DATE VORKRazors honed, Scissors and all edgedtools perfectly ground. Satisfaction Guaranteed,WAIANUENUE STREET.SomeDelicaciesNow in StockCurtice Jams and Jellies Curtice Blue LablcGoodsIlciuz's Pickles andPreservesC. & B.Jams and Jellies AnchoviesAnchovy Paste nndKsscnceMajor Grcy'sChulnccWhite Label Olives" " PimolasMushroom Ca tsu pI'rcnch Capers"Health Koffy"Postum Ceieal"Nicelle"01ieOilRaspberry VinegarCurtice Maple SyrupTerrapin SoupCaviarISLAND Bl'TTP.RWmK AyWHITMAN'SCHOCOLATES andCONFECTIONSL. TURNER CO.,LiniTnoHILO MARKET 00.,LIMITED.Telephone No. 39.Bridgh St. - Hilo, H. IPacific Meat MarkelFront St., Hilo, H. I,Choice Cuts ofBeef, Mutton,Pork, Veal.POULTRY of all KindsFRESH ISLAND BUTTERFlno Fat Turkoys.. . Sucking Pigs.J. D. KENNEDYWatchesJewelrySilverwareEVERYTHING FIRSTCLASSWM. G. IRWIN & CO., Ltd.Sugar Factors,Commission Agents.Sole Agents forNational Cane Shredders,Baldwin Locomotives,Alex. Cross & Sons' Sugar Caneand Coffee Fertilizers.Hilo Railroad Co.Short Route to VolcanoTIME TABLEIn effect March 1, 1902.Passenger Trains, Except Sunday.No. 1 No. 3 No. 4'No. 6A.M. P.M. STATIONS AM ,,7.00 3:301V Hilo ar 9:30 6:007.30 3:5oar...01aa Mill...ar 9:10 5:407:30 4:00 ar Keaau ar 9:00 5:307 15 4.15 ar... Fcrndalc.ar 8:45 5:158 00 4:3oar..Mount. V'v..lv 8:30 5:00I SUNDAY.A M. I'.M. A.M. P.M.8:00 3:301V Hilo ar 10:30 6:008:20 3:50 ar...01aa Mill. ..ar 10:10 5:408:30 4:00 ar Keaau ar lo-oo 5:308:45 4:'5ar...Perndnle...ar 9:45 5:159:00 4:30 ar.. Mount. V'w..lv 9:30 5:00Mxd. POR PUNA Mxd.A.M. Thurbday. p.m.11:00 lv Hilo ar 2:0011:20' ar...01aa Mill...nr 1:4011:40 ar Pahoa ar . 1:2012:00 ar Pu mi lv '. 1 :ooPns. Sunday. Pas.A.M P.M.9:00 ....v lv Hilo ar 4:259 2o "... iir...O!im Mill...ar 4 05940. ar Pahoa ar 3-451 0.00 1 ar Puna lv 3:25The only desirable means of reachingthe Volcano. Connections at MountainView with stages daily morning trainsgoing; afternoon trains returning. Parefrom Hilo for the round trip S. Thisroute is through Olaa plantation, thelargest in Hawaii, virgin forests of koaand wild ferns, and through many coffeefarms.The natural wonders of Puna makethat district the most interesting spot inHawaii. One can spend a most delightfill day exploring the underground cues,swimming in the famous Hot Springsand resting on the cool shores of GreenLake.Excursion tickets between all pointsarc sold on Saturdays and Sundays, goodreturning, until the following Mondaynoon.Commutation tickets, good for twentyfive rides between nny t o points, nndthousand mile tickets are sold at verylow rates.BAD EFFECTS OF ItOENTUEN KAYSUnrns, Dictations of Hlooil-Vcsscls,Scars From Application to Skin.It is evident that we arc as yetfar from having attained to completeness of knowledge in regard tothe effects which may be producedby the Roentgen rays. That theymay cause very unpleasant andslowly healing "burns" is now wellknown, as also that these effectsmay not show themselves for sometime after the application. Again,it has been shown that in somecases, even when no ulceration isproduced, considerable pigmentation may be set up, so that it mayoccasionally happen that in the attempt to get rid of a degree of hir-suteness which may be, comparatively speaking, not n matter ofgreat consequence, an amount ofpigmentation may be producedwhich may be most annoying andmay last for a long time. Lately,however, another unfortunate resultof the rays has come to light,namely, the development of disfiguring telangiectases on the areadealt with. These starlikc dilations of the blood-vessels, whenthey occur in any number, may bevery disfiguring, and there is thisthat is curious about them that insome cases a considerable jtimcseveral months seems to haveelapsed before they showed themselves.There can be no doubt that therays, in passing through the tissues, exercise a selective power,affecting certain tissues destructively (as is well shown in their actionupon certain forms of cancer), andit may,be presumed that in thecases mentioned the dilatation ofthe cutaneous blood vessels haseither been due to interferencewith the circulation by a form ofscar contraction following the partial destruction of certain tissuesaround the vessels, or may evenhave beenjjdue to the destructiveeffects of the rays upon the walls ofthe vessels themselves, leading totheir gradual dilatation under thepressure of the blood. But, however they are caused, they servewell to show how careful one mustbe in the use "of an agent the natureof which we do not as yet fullyunderstand.W. II. LAMBERT,Superintendent.R. R. ELGIN,G. P. & T. A.A Dramatic Sltuntlon.An unfortunate mishap recentlybefell a theatrical company touringin Queensland.They could only muster one frockcoat, which had to be used by thedoctor and the villain of the piecein turn.One night the manager borroweda pair of handcuffs from the localpolice station. At the right dramatic moment they were clicked onthe villain's wrists, amid loud applause. Imagine the dismay when it wasfound that the key of the handcuffshad been forgotten, and the oneand onlyjfrock coat was securelylocked to the villain.The doctor, who was in waitingin his shirt sleeves in the wings,had no alternative but to go on' ashe was. He was equal to the situation, however, and at once explained that he had driven in hishaste through pelting rain and lefthis frock coat outside to be dried.London Express.Supply of Eggs.The annual supply of eggs in theUnited States is said to be about8,500,000,000, or more than 700,000,000 dozen, and their value isequal to that of the product of ourgold and silver mines, says the NewYork Press. Some men eat twodozen eggs a day. Some do noteat two dozen in a year. They aresupposed to render certain folk bilious. A raw egg may be digestediu two hours, one soft boiled inthree hours, hard boiled in threeand a half, roasted in two and aquarter. Did you ever roast anegg before the fire? Place on topI of it a straw, and when it is done1 the straw will make a half revolution. A well-roasted egg is a delicious morsel. Iu the days of woodiires it was more common to roasteggs than to boil them. Touchstone speaks of their being "illroasted, all on one side," and weare indebted to Pope for these lines.THE ODE TRAFFIC IN ENULAND.Recent Utterances of English footsDeclared Unworthy.The London Saturday Reviewsays that "on a moderate estimate,which the editor of any daily paperwill bear out, one hundred coronation odes were rejected to everyone printed; a supposition whichwould bring the number of pairs ofeyes that have rolled in a finefrenzy to three thousand or so."One may allow, this writer thinks,a modicum of inspiration to a largepercentage of these, "whether theyhave been in a position to hcllootheir odes to the reverberate hillsor have rhymed the substance oftheir leading articles." He findsin all the odes common attributes,for example: In an ode you mustbegin with cither a vocative or anexclamation: "Maecenas atavisedite regibus." But as "0 Edward, the Seventh" sounds a littlebanal, the exclamation openingthe theory may be tested in thepapers is prelcred, thus, "Sound,trumpets, sound; King Edwardreigns I" This is followed with areview of English history for whichGreen's "Short History of theEnglish people" has been found invaluable. This writer, however, sees a serious side to all this ode concocting."Throughout all these late years,full one would have thought ofElizabethan stuff, no poet hasstumbled into utterance worthy ofthe force of the national sentimentbehind him; and the cause may lieto a degree in the base service towhich the muse is set." It is aformula with editors to say, "Yourpoem is good but does not 'hangon to anything,' " as if it were thepart of a poem to be inspired by anewspaper paragraph. Rather, ifit is dependent at all, it shouldHung with gold chains about the feetof God.Everywhere the muse is stimulatedto be journalistic, to serve the moment, to write in the office, as itwere. We must have, perhaps,salutations. Tennyson wrote somefine stuff and Mr. Watson has donewell. But would Tennyson havetinkered to obey meteorological andchronological demands? and Mr.Watson who has written more finethan the rest, is of all our poets theone least in sympathy with thenational sentiment." And whathas this journalism extracted fromthe patriots. "Girls of the GoldenCity," the "sensual caterwaulingof the music halls," and jerrymandered odes. "What will posteritythink of us? Not much; but if,according to the old metaphor,every century is an overloadedship which in the last wreck willsink with most of its cargo it is asatisfaction to feel that the balespacked in the beginning are quitecertain to perish. If on the otherhand, as Bacon suggested, it is thelight stuff that floats on the streamof time, happily in this case toothese odes will sink."Philippine Census.Brigadier-General Joseph P.Sanger, who has been designated bySecretary Root to conduct the census taking iu the Philippines, hashad experience which makes himespecially well qualified to performthe work. He served during theSpanish war and afterward directedthe census of Cuba and Porto Rico.In the Philippines last year hesucceeded General George W.Davis as inspector-general. Hisduties also included an investigation of all matters pertaining to themilitary branch of the Governmentiu the Hawaiian Islands.In his new undertaking GeneralSanger will be assisted by II. W.Gannett of the Geological Surveyand Victor Olmstead of the Department of Labor. Twenty expertsI from the Census Bureau will alsoI be assigned to aid iu the work.JAS. M. CAMERON,Plumber, Tinner,Metal Worker.Mr. Camerou is prepared to give estimates on nil kinds of Plumbing Workand to guarantee all work done.MHHImRSMralilHmfllCompany. Ltd.DEALERS INPlantation Supplies ofAll DescriptionsBuilder's HardwarePlum bin a GoodsPaints and OilsFertilizersIron and SteelLumberWindowsBlindsDoorsA Full and CompleteLine of GroceriesSOLE AGENTS FOR HAWAIIKEEN OTTER KNIVES AND HOESP. O. BOX 94TELEPHONE4A4BRand made Saddles and fiarnc$$.CARRIAGETRIMMING.-AT-RICHARDS & SCHOEN,Hilo Harness Shop, Hilo, H. I,Are youLosing Money ?Are youSure of it?A NATIONAL CASHREGISTER willprove itSeeA. E. Sutton & Co.Waiakea Boat HouseR.A.LUCAS & CO., Prop'rs.WAIAKEA BRIDGE, HII.OIIAVIJ NOW A PI.nKT OPGasoline Launchesand Small BoatsFOR PUIJIJC IIIRF.Passengers and baggage taken to nndfrom vessels iu the harbor at reasonablerates. Launches and rowboats to hirelor private picnics and moonlight rides.RING UP ON TELEPHONETheAmericanG roceryPONAHAWAI ANDVOLCANO STREETSPrices Lower Than theIf younre in need of oti tiling ,frGOODS DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN THE tCITY.LowestGroceriesProvisionsCanned FruitsCanned MeatsGrain andFeedTELEPHONE 37AGENTS FORWolverine Gasoline EngineSelf-starter and reversible engine. Inpracticability it is coital to the bteiiui engine. Sies from li h. p. upwards,lloats fitted with this engine or frames ofany size to order. For particulars applyto R. A. LUCAS, Manager.Koa!Koa!!Koa Lumber in small and large quantities; well seasoned.Furniture made to order, any stylewanted. Repairs made on any kind offurniture. Prices moderate.Sorrao Cablnot Shop.Apply to JOSE G. SERRAO.BANANAS!!I want bananas in quantitiesup to 2,000 bunches, for whichI will payHighest Gash PriceAt tho Wharf9-hand or 50-poundbunches 65 centsBunches must be cut twoweeks before ripening andproperly packed in dry leavesPETER LEE'rI :M1 Ak Mt ,n 11immmmmmm